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A hobby for his honor

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  • A hobby for his honor

    St. Louis Today
    Sept 23 2004

    A HOBBY FOR HIS HONOR
    By Norman Parish


    Pounding the gavel is his job; making it is honored hobby

    Andy Matoesian is a circuit judge and an accomplished wood carver who
    is considered by at least one author to be one of the country's best.

    When Circuit Judge Andy Matoesian needs a gavel for his job, he
    doesn't have to order a new one. He simply makes it.

    For more than two decades, Matoesian has made gavels for himself and
    fellow Madison County judges, as well as thousands of other items
    from wood, in his Edwardsville garage. He says he has made about
    1,500 gavels and about 15,000 pens since the late 1960s.

    Matoesian also occasionally makes furniture, bottle stoppers and
    large crosses for his church - Holy Virgin Mary Armenian Church in
    Swansea. His handiwork has been used by people from Illinois to
    California, including a gavel in a 1993 movie, "Precious Victims."

    And James A. Jacobson, who has written about a dozen books on
    woodworking, considers Matoesian as one of the best wood craftsmen in
    the country.

    "It is just a great hobby," said Matoesian, 67. "I love it. I get up
    at 4:30 a.m. and start working."

    Matoesian, a Granite City native, said he first learned about
    woodworking as a student at Granite City High School during the
    1950s. The son of a barber, Matoesian later concentrated his efforts
    on barbering after graduating from Peoria Barber College in 1956.

    He used his barbering skills while attending college - at Southern
    Illinois University, Illinois State University and the Washington
    University law school, from which he graduated in 1964. He worked for
    a law firm headed by lawyer Rex Carr before being appointed a
    magistrate (now associate) judge in 1965. In 1978, Matoesian was
    appointed a county circuit judge. He handles civil cases.

    Matoesian returned to his love of woodworking a couple of years after
    he became a judge in 1965. He said he wanted a hobby in which he
    could remain close to a daughter, Georgea, who suffered from
    neurological problems. She died in 2002 of complications of
    pneumonia.

    Matoesian's wife, Julie, works as assistant state's attorney in child
    support enforcement. Another daughter, Jane, is a lawyer in St.
    Louis.

    Matoesian said he now uses the woodworking to help relieve stress. He
    also wants to improve.

    "It is a constructive use of leisure time," he said.

    Matoesian regularly works in his garage or a large workshop room he
    has assembled in his house. He admits he has more than $20,000 worth
    of equipment. He usually uses walnut or cherry wood for his
    creations.

    Sometimes his hobby can be a little risky - such as the time he cut
    his right index finger. It required about 20 stitches to close.

    "You can never completely master woodworking," Matoesian said.

    But Jacobson, the woodworking author, believes Matoesian is an
    expert. In fact, Jacobson said he has featured Matoesian in eight of
    his books.

    "It is a hobby to (Matoesian),- but he has developed it into a fine
    art," said Jacobson, a retired Southern Illinois University
    Edwardsville criminal justice professor who now lives in Grand
    Marais, Minn. "In my opinion, he is one of the best."

    Chief Circuit Judge Edward C. Ferguson agrees.

    "I think (his gavels) are great," said Ferguson, who adds that
    Matoesian makes a two-foot-long, five-pound gavel for chief judges
    when they leave their posts. "They are wonderfully crafted. It is a
    wonderful skill. I wish I had it."
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